Quick summary (recent blitz patterns)
Nice work — your games show you can finish with clean tactical blows and you keep fighting in messy positions. Short-term rating is down, which suggests recurring leaks to patch fast in blitz. Below I highlight strengths, main leaks, and a compact plan to get your rating back on track.
What you’re doing well
- Sharp tactical awareness — you find forcing shots (captures, mating nets) and convert when the opponent gives you chances.
- Aggressive opening choices — your repertoire forces opponents into risky positions where you score above 50% overall on several lines.
- Attacking instincts — multiple wins come from precise king hunts and continuous checks; you’re comfortable complicating positions.
- Resilience — you keep playing until mate or flag; that fighting spirit is a big blitz advantage.
Main weaknesses to fix (based on recent games)
- King safety & back-rank tactics — a few losses ended with a mating pattern or heavy-piece invasion. Give your king luft and be careful trading off defenders.
- Loose pieces / hanging material — early captures like Nxd5 sometimes leave you with vulnerable pieces or counterplay. Add a quick “are any pieces hanging?” scan before moving.
- Time management in the final phase — you often reach low time and make rushed decisions. Practice finishing with 30–60 seconds on the clock.
- Endgame evaluation — you traded into endings where the opponent’s rook activity or passed pawns decided the outcome. Study simple rook endgames and basic active rook technique.
- Specific opening trouble: Caro‑Kann and some Ponziani branches — you met back‑rank pressure and active rook infiltration. Learn one safe plan to neutralize those threats.
Concrete training plan (2-week blitz cycle)
- Daily (15–20 min): Tactics trainer focused on forks, pins, back‑rank mates, and discovered attacks. Focus on speed + accuracy.
- 3× week (20–30 min): Short endgame drills — king+pawn vs king, basic rook endgames, and defending with rook + pawn. Learn 2–3 practical techniques.
- 2× week (30 min): Review 3 of your recent losses move-by-move. Ask: “Could I have improved king safety? Which piece was loose? Was this a time scramble error?”
- Weekly (1 session): 20–30 min opening maintenance — pick your top 3 problem lines (Caro‑Kann reply, common Scandinavian sidelines) and learn 1 reliable plan for each.
- Blitz practice: Play a few 3+2 or 5+3 sessions instead of 5|0 — increment trains time management and reduces flag blunders.
Short technical fixes you can use immediately
- Before every move in the last 5 minutes, do a 2‑second scan: “Is any piece hanging? Any back‑rank mate?” This prevents cheap LPDOs (Loose Piece Drop Off).
- If your king lacks luft and the opponent has heavy pieces, consider trading rooks or creating a flight square before pushing pawns that open files.
- When the opponent has an active rook on the seventh or open files, prioritize piece activity and rook exchanges over grabbing a marginal pawn.
- When you see repeating checks or king marches, count the forcing moves to avoid walking into traps (Patzer-check patterns). Slow down if the sequence is complex.
Opening notes (practical)
Keep your aggressive repertoire — it’s effective overall. But tighten two things:
- Patch the replies you lose to in the Caro‑Kann / Ponziani lines — learn one simple defensive plan that avoids tactical back-rank shots.
- Drill typical middle‑game plans from the Amazon Attack / Barnes lines. You score well when you know the plan; you lose when you only know the first few moves.
Openings to review: Scandinavian Defense, Caro-Kann, Barnes Defense.
Two-week checklist to track
- Daily tactics streak ≥ 10 solved per day
- At least 6 reviewed games (focus on losses) with 1–2 sentences of notes each
- 2 practice sessions with 3+2 or 5+3 time control
- 1 targeted opening mini‑lesson (15–30 minutes) on your weakest reply
Motivation & long-term view
Your 6‑month trend shows real progress (+35), even though 1‑ and 3‑month snapshots are down. Blitz is noisy — fix the quick leaks (loose pieces, back‑rank, time scramble) and your rating will recover. Keep the aggressive style that makes opponents uncomfortable.
Replay suggestion
Here’s a short replay of one recent winning sequence you can paste into a study board or use as a drill:
- Decisive tactical finish from a recent win:
Want a full annotated loss review? Paste the PGN or tell me which game to analyze and I’ll annotate key moments.